STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. - Two cops accused of stranding a teen in a desolate West Shore marsh as punishment for a Halloween 2007 egging incident will each pay $5,000 to help settle a federal lawsuit, according to a Daily News report.

Officers Thomas Elliassen and Richard Danese, then assigned to the 120th Precinct stationhouse in St. George, will each have to kick in on top of the $140,000 the city agreed to pay plaintiff Rayshawn Moreno, 18, the News reported, citing papers filed in Brooklyn Federal Court.

The officers were indicted on first-degree unlawful imprisonment charges, but later pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct in exchange for a conditional discharge when Moreno refused to testify.

In 2007, Moreno, then 14, was picked up by the two police officers after they caught him allegedly throwing eggs at cars near the corner of Arlington Place and South Avenue in Mariners Harbor on Halloween night.

Moreno accused the officers of taking him to a "dark and desolate wooded area" by the west end of River Road in Chelsea, ordering him to his knees, removing his shirt and sneakers and kicking and hitting him before abandoning him there.

Then teen said he walked a mile to a shopping center to get help.

The officers were allowed to stay on the force, according to the News report.

Since the incident, Moreno has had numerous brushes with the law, most recently in March, when he was accused of shooting someone in the leg after a West Brighton party.